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German Chancellor Angela Merkel and U.S.
President George W. Bush address the media after a meeting in Heiligendamm
June 6, 2007. Leaders from the world's major industrialised nations meet
in the Baltic resort of Heiligendamm on June 6-8 for a Group of Eight (G8)
summit. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> | HEILIGENDAMM,
Germany, June 6 (Xinhua) -- The summit of the Group of Eight (G8) industrialized
nations started Wednesday evening near the German Baltic resort of Heiligendamm,
with German Chancellor Angela Merkel hosting an informal dinner for the leaders
of the world's major economic powers.
The dinner was held in a 14th-century palace on the
Hohen Luckow estate, some 25 km southeast of the summit venue in Heiligendamm.
Most of the leaders arrived in Heiligendamm on
Wednesday. U.S. President George W. Bush flew in Heiligendamm on Tuesday, who is
on a European tour.
The three-day G8 summit is expected to focus on
climate change, the development in Africa, the Doha Round of the World Trade
Organization, the U.S. plan of deploying a missile defense shield in Central
Europe.
The leaders may also talk about Iran's nuclear
program and the security situation in the Middle East.
The G8 groups Britain, Canada, France, Germany,
Italy, Japan, Russia and the United States.
Besides talks among themselves, the leaders of the
world's major economic powers are scheduled to have two outreach sessions, one
with five major developing countries -- Brazil, China, India, Mexico and South
Africa, and the other with African countries -- Algeria, Ethiopia, Egypt, Ghana,
Nigeria, Senegal and South Africa.
Before the start of the event, Bush was busy with
meeting fellow G8 leaders, including Merkel and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo
Abe, on Wednesday.
Following a meeting with Merkel, Bush told reporters
he has a "strong desire" to work with other world leaders for a post-Kyoto
Protocol agreement designed to tackle climate change, one of the most
controversial issues to be discussed at G8 summit.
"I come with a strong desire to work with you
(Merkel) on a post-Kyoto agreement about how we can achieve major objectives.
One, of course, is the reduction of greenhouse gases. Another is to become more
energy independent -- in our case, from crude oil from parts of the world where
we've got some friends, and sometimes we don't have friends," he said.
The United States, the world's biggest greenhouse gas
emitter, remains committed to reduce greenhouse gas and raise energy efficiency,
he said.
Merkel said she expected "intensive debate" during
the summit on the issue of climate change.
The United States has been under attacks from Europe
and environmental activists for not having taking stronger measures to tackle
climate change.
Germany, which holds the rotating G8 presidency, has
called for actions to limit the rise in global temperatures to two degrees
Celsius this century and to cut carbon emissions by 50 percent below 1990 levels
by 2050.
The United States voiced "fundamental opposition" to
the German proposal.
Bush has announced a separate plan, calling on 15 of
the world's biggest greenhouse producers to meet and agree on long-term goals by
the end of 2008.
The United States, which has refused to ratify Kyoto
Protocol, remains opposed to mandatory targets, citing that environmental
protection cannot come at the price of hurting economic growth.
After their talks in Heiligendamm, Bush and Abe said
they agreed that both countries would work jointly for an effective and flexible
framework concerning the issue of climate change.
"On climate change ...We agreed that Japan and the
United States would be working together for the creation of an effective
framework which is flexible, and that we would be cooperating to achieve that
end in the future," Abe told reporters.
Earlier in the day, European Commission President
Jose Manuel Barroso urged Washington to take stronger measures to tackle climate
change.
Europe has yet to see more "contribution" by the
United States in the fight against climate change, Barroso told reporters
beforethe start of the G8 summit.
On another contentious issue -- the U.S. plan of
deploying a missile defense shield in Central Europe, Bush tried Wednesday to
tone down the tense words of war between himself and Russian President Vladimir
Putin.
Bush said no military response is necessary even
after Russia threatened to retarget Europe if the United States continues with
its missile defense plan.
"Russia is not an enemy," Bush told reporters here.
"There needs to be no military response because we're
not at war with Russia. ... Russia is not a threat. Nor is the missile defense
we're proposing a threat to Russia," he said.
The United States plans to place a radar system in
the Czech Republic and interceptor missiles in neighboring Poland in the name of
defending possible attacks from Iran.
Russia has accused Washington of raising a new arms
race in theregion, which Washington denies.
Security is extremely tightened around Heiligendamm,
but anti-globalization protests stole the show of the day.
The German government has mobilized more than 16,000
policemen to be stationed around Heiligendamm in a bid to have a perfect G8
summit. A 12-km steel fence have been built around the venue.
Nevertheless, some 6,000 anti-globalization
protesters evaded police road-blocks Wednesday morning and approached the fence
around the summit venue in defiance of a police ban.
Later, German police used tear-gas and water cannons
to disperse protesters at the fence, and also off Highway 105 which runs past
Heiligendamm at a distance of about 6 km. Police said they took the actions
after being stoned by some protesters.
One of the protest leaders told German TV Wednesday
that a sit-down blockade around the summit compound would continue until the end
of the G8 Summit.
Bush has "strong desire" to work for
climate change agreement
HEILIGENDAMM, Germany, June 6 (Xinhua) -- U.S.
President George W. Bush said Wednesday that he has a "strong desire" to work
with other world leaders for a post-Kyoto Protocol agreement designed to tackle
climate change.
Bush made the remarks after a meeting with German
Chancellor Angela Merkel before the summit of the Group of Eight (G8) leading
industrialized nations in the northern German resort of Heiligendamm. Full story
G8 summit set to fall short of fixed
targets on climate change
HEILIGENDAMM, Germany, June 6 (Xinhua) -- No fixed
targets to fight global warming will come out of the Group of Eight (G8) summit
as the United States and Germany remain far apart on the issue, reports said
Wednesday.
Washington and Berlin have apparently failed to agree on
fixed targets in the fight against global warming at talks ahead of the G8
summit, the German press service DPA said. Full story

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